Good thing is I’m not a ML hunter, just a hunter who uses a ML every now and then. I hear ya though.Spoken like a true ML hunter, has the best 9 days of the entire year, with a gun and still needs more time to get it done! If you’d turn off your atv when you’re bugling off of it, you might be able to hear the other ML hunter around the corner bugling out of his Jeep! Just kidding, just kidding!
You’ll still have bear rifle all Sep unless they move archery to Dec.My problem is the overlap; the ML's I've seen while out treat it more like a noisy hike. I just don't think that methods of take overlapping with varying methodologies of how to approach success is a good idea. If it would present that much problem for moose hunters, I'd rather see ML get the first week of September and leave archery for the last 3 weeks than ever see an orange vest in the woods again while I'm out.
I have not seen a bear hunter once since 2018 in both draw-only elk archery areas or OTC for elk archery, so it's not really on my radar - are they that much of a presence elsewhere with any consistency? Frankly, I don't foresee as much impact on moose rifle vs archery elk, and maintain my preference being ML being moved to after archery. I'd also support scopes/RDS and/or sabots being allowed for ML if they were to shift it into a slightly later time and they would find it advantageous for any perceived hamstringing due to the move.You’ll still have bear rifle all Sep unless they move archery to Dec.
I do it every other year and archery hunt as well, i also ML hunt, i usually don’t see others unless i go check out areas i know get pressure, i’ve never worried about ML or rifle hunters when I archery hunt. Truth is 80% of archery, ML and rifle hunters stay close to roads and trails even in units that are overun with otc archery tags or easy to draw limited tags.I have not seen a bear hunter once since 2018 in both draw-only elk archery areas or OTC for elk archery, so it's not really on my radar - are they that much of a presence elsewhere with any consistency? Frankly, I don't foresee as much impact on moose rifle vs archery elk, and maintain my preference being ML being moved to after archery. I'd also support scopes/RDS and/or sabots being allowed for ML if they were to shift it into a slightly later time and they would find it advantageous for any perceived hamstringing due to the move.
Excellent, thank you. Just drives the point further home then!The story I was always told was that when they merged the two departments back in the 2011 was that they shared the same budget and that the wildlife side was paying for the parks side.
That is not true. When they merged they did roll together and share the back office functions, website and so on but both Parks and Wildlife have separate budgets and separate revenue streams. The fees raised from tags do not fund the parks dept and revenue from parks does not go in to the wildlife budget.
When you look at this link:
Colorado Parks and Wildlife
Colorado Parks and Wildlife is a nationally recognized leader in conservation, outdoor recreation and wildlife management. The agency manages 42 state parks, all of Colorado's wildlife, more than 300 state wildlife areas and a host of recreational programs. CPW issues hunting and fishing...cpw.state.co.us
It shows the first graph which shows the combined revenue for parks and wildlife at $329 million, however the next two graphs show the independent revenue of Parks at $124 million and Wildlife at $196 million.
At the very bottom it states about 2.5% of Parks and Wildlife expenditures are shared, this is the back office and website stuff.
So in the end $50 million of elk licenses covers the $196 million Wildlife division budget, which comes to 25% of their budget.
Some reading:
Mensa membership denied.
The unit I hunt for first season elk, I see both out hunting together while I scout each year. Obviously more antelope hunters based on the tags. Their range overlaps quite a bit in Colorado. I guess it could be seen as funny
I have never seen them at the same time but I have seen elk, deer, moose, and antelope in the same field as well. I hunt somewhat close to Craig as well.I have pictures of a Bull moose in the wide open sage flats just outside of Craig that I took last year the last week of September. I damn near crashed by truck when my son pointed it out. In all my years its the first and only one I've personally seen in the sage. Pretty cool.
But you're obviously an elk hunter... Mule deer guys like me would disagree.My problem is the overlap; the ML's I've seen while out treat it more like a noisy hike. I just don't think that methods of take overlapping with varying methodologies of how to approach success is a good idea. If it would present that much problem for moose hunters, I'd rather see ML get the first week of September and leave archery for the last 3 weeks than ever see an orange vest in the woods again while I'm out.
Willing to learn. Why do/would you disagree and about what specifically?But you're obviously an elk hunter... Mule deer guys like me would disagree.
Nice one, bro...Californian spotted.
Also, Mensa membership denied for whom exactly? Do I need to explain the tongue in cheek joke and the logic?
But if you think being a Resident of a state (that includes paying taxes) should not entitle you to the benefits of living in your state...Lets turn Arizona into OTC for NR!
Struck a nerve at a joke eh? Don't take it so personally.As a conservative fighting the good fight in CA (and not fleeing like so many pussies who surrendered the state libtards) I have spent a great deal of time hunting other western states...especially AZ & CO. I don't disparage people based on geography and in case you didn't notice, all three states went to Biden in 2020. Maybe you should go back and read my previous posts in this thread.
The earlier the better for muleys. They are more visible, predictable, and vulnerable in their summer pattern. Get harder to kill everyday deeper into September you get.Willing to learn. Why do/would you disagree and about what specifically?
Just exactly what states are racing to keep out NR hunters? ID and MT have had the same number of NR tags for decades, nothing's changed there. WY has a set amount of NR tags, nothing's changed there. UT still gladly sells unlimited archery tags for elk, and NR can draw deer tags easier than residents in a lot of units. NV has always been hard. I'm guessing you're talking about NM and AZ?Change is probably coming. As all the other western states race to keep out DIY non-resident hunters, CO bears the majority of that pressure. Some changes may need to be made with regard to OTC hunts but I don’t think severely limiting DIY non residents hunters is going to solve all the problems facing western resident hunters these days.
This is what, the second or third version of CPW? Figures lie and liars figure. That's how govt works. Each time Parks is split off on its own previously it has floundered, each time its tied back in with Wildlife it has succeeded. They can show whatever charts they want to, but the history of the departments is easily researched.The story I was always told was that when they merged the two departments back in the 2011 was that they shared the same budget and that the wildlife side was paying for the parks side.
That is not true. When they merged they did roll together and share the back office functions, website and so on but both Parks and Wildlife have separate budgets and separate revenue streams. The fees raised from tags do not fund the parks dept and revenue from parks does not go in to the wildlife budget.
When you look at this link:
Colorado Parks and Wildlife
Colorado Parks and Wildlife is a nationally recognized leader in conservation, outdoor recreation and wildlife management. The agency manages 42 state parks, all of Colorado's wildlife, more than 300 state wildlife areas and a host of recreational programs. CPW issues hunting and fishing...cpw.state.co.us
It shows the first graph which shows the combined revenue for parks and wildlife at $329 million, however the next two graphs show the independent revenue of Parks at $124 million and Wildlife at $196 million.
At the very bottom it states about 2.5% of Parks and Wildlife expenditures are shared, this is the back office and website stuff.
So in the end $50 million of elk licenses covers the $196 million Wildlife division budget, which comes to 25% of their budget.
Some reading:
Struck a nerve at a joke eh? Don't take it so personally.
Coloradans have been living through a blue invasion right now where Denver/Front Range controls the dark red rest of the state. California went through the same thing at one point.
You're disparaging people based on political beliefs. That's ok, you can be a hypocrite with ad hominem attacks. You can also statistically correlate geography to political beliefs and stance. For example. Me or you moving from our respective states to somewhere else would show that we would have a high likelihood of voting blue. Its been showing its stripes in Colorado in the last decade as a purple state has shifted dramatically left.
Also, I'm not reading your other posts in this thread; that really has nothing to do with your reply.